Sexual Selection in Primates 2004
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9780511542459.012
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Development and sexual selection in primates

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Cited by 30 publications
(27 citation statements)
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References 128 publications
(163 reference statements)
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“…When we did not know the exact date of an event we used the average date between the 2 known dates most closely around that event; e.g., the last time an individual was observed ranging solitarily and the first time it was observed in a new group (see Table I for ranges of estimates). Building on the already established age of weaning at an age of 6 mo (Rotundo et al 2005), we used these developmental milestones to assign ages to the juvenile and subadult (and thus adult) age categories (Pereira and Altmann 1985;Pereira and Fairbanks 1993;Setchell and Lee 2004).…”
Section: Age At Dispersal First Reproduction and Resulting Age Catementioning
confidence: 99%
“…When we did not know the exact date of an event we used the average date between the 2 known dates most closely around that event; e.g., the last time an individual was observed ranging solitarily and the first time it was observed in a new group (see Table I for ranges of estimates). Building on the already established age of weaning at an age of 6 mo (Rotundo et al 2005), we used these developmental milestones to assign ages to the juvenile and subadult (and thus adult) age categories (Pereira and Altmann 1985;Pereira and Fairbanks 1993;Setchell and Lee 2004).…”
Section: Age At Dispersal First Reproduction and Resulting Age Catementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although differences between primiparous and multiparous females could reflect maternal experience, age-related patterns among primiparous females seem more likely to arise from differences in physical condition and/or maternal investment. Thus, although females of some species may not conceive until they reach a threshold weight (Festa-Bianchet et al, 1995;Bercovitch et al, 1998;Neuhaus et al, 2004;Setchell and Lee, 2004), the higher offspring mortality in primiparous mountain gorillas may reflect females who had not yet matured sufficiently for successful reproduction.…”
Section: Primiparous Femalesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Being born with this sexually differentiated brain allows for learning and the practice of relevant adult behaviour long before facing the demands of reproductive and adult social life. Thus, prenatal differentiation of the brain might fall among what Setchell & Lee (2004) identify as sex-specific developmental pathways arising from age-dependent selection pressures linked to distinct adult reproductive strategies, constrained by time and energy expenditure for both mothers and the developing immatures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%